DeepSeek writes some of the most math-heavy answers of any assistant — and has no export button. Copy the Markdown, paste, download a .docx with every equation editable.
Key facts
Native export: none — copy-and-convert is the standard path to a document.
What carries over: headings, lists, fenced code, tables, blockquotes, inline + block LaTeX — in English, Chinese, or mixed.
R1 reasoning: plain prose; include it or copy just the final answer.
Math handling: all DeepSeek delimiter styles normalize automatically; DOCX equations are editable OMML.
Cost: free. No signup, no quota.
Step 01
Copy the answer — not the reasoning
Use the copy icon under the DeepSeek reply. If DeepThink (R1) mode showed its reasoning first, copy just the final answer unless you want the chain-of-thought in your document too.
The copy control captures the underlying Markdown. Manual text selection drops code fences, table syntax, and math delimiters.
Step 02
Open the converter
Visit the homepage. No signup, no install — the converter loads as a single page and the preview updates as you type.
Works in any modern browser. English and Chinese content both convert fine.
Step 03
Paste
Cmd-V (Mac) or Ctrl-V (Windows/Linux). Headings, lists, tables, code blocks, and KaTeX equations render live in the preview pane.
DeepSeek is math-heavy — check the preview renders every formula; whatever renders here exports correctly.
Step 04
Export DOCX (or PDF, HTML)
Click DOCX. Server-side Pandoc produces the file — native Word tables, editable Office Math equations, clean heading hierarchy — and it downloads instantly.
If the server route is unreachable, a fully-local DOCX fallback takes over. Both produce a valid Word document.
DeepSeek-specific things to know
No native document export
DeepSeek can't save a Word or PDF file itself. Copy-and-convert is the standard path to a real document — nothing to expire, no tier requirements.
R1 reasoning blocks
DeepThink mode shows the model's reasoning before the answer. It's plain text — if you copy it along with the answer, it converts as ordinary paragraphs. Most documents read better without it.
Math-heavy output
DeepSeek leans hard on LaTeX for anything quantitative. Inline and block math both convert to native, editable Office Math (OMML) in the DOCX — the main thing lost when pasting into Word directly.
Mixed-language documents
Chinese, English, and mixed content convert identically — Markdown structure is language-independent, and the DOCX opens correctly in Word and WPS Office.
Frequently asked questions
How do I save a DeepSeek answer as a Word document?
Copy the reply with DeepSeek's copy icon, paste it into LLM to Doc, and click DOCX. Headings, tables, code, and equations arrive as real Word formatting. Free, no signup.
Does DeepSeek have a built-in export to Word or PDF?
No — DeepSeek has no native document export. Converting the copied Markdown is the standard way to turn a DeepSeek answer into a file, and it preserves far more structure than pasting into Word.
What happens to DeepSeek R1's reasoning in the export?
Whatever you copy converts. The reasoning block is plain prose, so if you include it, it becomes ordinary paragraphs; most people copy only the final answer for a cleaner document.
Do DeepSeek's equations become editable Word math?
Yes. DeepSeek's LaTeX ($…$, $$…$$, or \( … \) forms) is normalized automatically and converts to native Office Math (OMML) — click into any equation in Word or WPS and edit it.
Try it on a DeepSeek answer
Copy any DeepSeek reply, paste, and you’ll have a DOCX in seconds.